Advertisement
Advertisement
grease
[ noun grees; verb grees, greez ]
noun
- the melted or rendered fat of animals, especially when in a soft state:
She always saves the bacon grease to fry her eggs and potatoes in.
- fatty or oily matter in general; lubricant:
The auto mechanic’s overalls were stained with engine grease and motor oil.
The golfer admitted to using a little grease on the face of his driver to reduce sidespin.
- Informal. a bribe.
- Also called grease wool [grees, w, oo, l]. shorn wool before being cleaned of the oily matter.
- Also called grease-heel [grees, -heel]. Veterinary Pathology. inflammation of a horse's skin in the fetlock region, accompanied by an oily secretion.
verb (used with object)
- to lubricate by putting a fatty or oily substance on:
I think I need to grease my bike chain a little—it’s not moving smoothly.
- to smear or cover with a fatty or oily substance:
Grease the baking sheet before spooning the dough onto it.
In pioneer days they sometimes made windows out of greased paper.
- to cause to occur easily or smoothly; facilitate:
Extra incentives were offered to grease the trade deal.
If it looks like it’ll be an awkward social engagement, he has a stiff drink first to grease the proceedings.
- Informal. to bribe.
grease
noun
- animal fat in a soft or melted condition
- any thick fatty oil, esp one used as a lubricant for machinery, etc
- Also calledgrease wool shorn fleece before it has been cleaned
- Also calledseborrhoea vet science inflammation of the skin of horses around the fetlocks, usually covered with an oily secretion
verb
- to soil, coat, or lubricate with grease
- to ease the course of
his education greased his path to success
- grease the palm of or grease the hand of slang.to bribe; influence by giving money to
Derived Forms
- ˈgreaseless, adjective
Other Words From
- grease·less adjective
- grease·less·ness noun
- grease·proof adjective
- re·grease verb (used with object) regreased regreasing
- un·greased adjective
- well-greased adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of grease1
Word History and Origins
Origin of grease1
Idioms and Phrases
- grease (someone's) palm, to bribe:
The only way to get a permit in this town is to grease the commissioner's palm.
More idioms and phrases containing grease
- elbow grease
- like greased lightning
- squeaky wheel gets the grease
Example Sentences
“Everybody was on alert because little balls of grease drifted out. People floated backwards, like in the Matrix film, to dodge the balls of meat juice.”
Other sounds, be it his wife popping chewing gum or a neighbour's dog barking, and some smells, such as congealed fat or grease, and sights such as fluorescent lights, have always made him very uncomfortable.
Professor William Alexander Donald said they resembled fat, oil, and grease blobs - often called fatbergs - which are commonly formed in sewerage systems.
Also in attendance were Klum’s daughter, Leni, who also dressed up as an alien, Kelsea Ballerini and boyfriend Chase Stokes decked out as Danny and Sandy from “Grease,” Nicole Scherzinger as her blood-soaked “Sunset Boulevard” character and TikToker Charli D’Amelio as a “Black Swan” ballerina.
The robot also spares workers from the risk of burns from hot oil or slips on grease.
Advertisement
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse